Away from mainstream financial headlines, two SADC nations have steadily climbed to the top of the UAE’s African trade rankings. One has built a diversified, investment-backed partnership, while the other rides a commodity wave that is only beginning to reveal its full potential. Together, they are reshaping what Gulf–Africa trade looks like in 2025.
South Africa now stands as the UAE’s leading partner within the Southern African Development Community. Non-oil trade between the two reached $8.5 billion in 2024, marking a 14 percent rise on 2023 and a striking 120 percent increase since 2019. Consequently, South Africa ranks as the UAE’s second-largest non-oil trade partner across Africa, accounting for 7.6 percent of that total. By mid-2025, bilateral flows had already reached $3.93 billion.
What sets the partnership apart is structure, not scale alone. South African exports span precious metals, edible fruits, vehicles, beverages, and organic chemicals, reflecting a genuinely diversified basket. Moreover, investment runs in both directions. UAE investment exceeded $1.3 billion in 2024, with ADNOC, DP World, and Masdar-backed Infinity Power expanding their footprint. Notably, Infinity Power’s acquisition of Lekela Power, completed through Masdar, ranks as Africa’s largest renewable energy deal to date.
Zimbabwe offers a different yet equally compelling chapter. Its exports to the UAE climbed to roughly $2.72 billion in 2024, a figure broadly comparable to South Africa’s. Remarkably, the UAE is now Zimbabwe’s single largest export market. According to ZimTrade, the Gulf nation absorbed about 35.7 percent of total exports in 2024, while subsequent ZIMSTAT data indicates the share has since pushed beyond half. Gold, diamonds, and tobacco drive these flows toward Dubai’s refining and re-export hub.
The contrast across the UAE–SADC trade corridor is instructive. Both nations export at comparable values, yet South Africa has converted volume into diversification and durable investment, anchored by institutions such as the Dubai Chamber. Zimbabwe’s corridor, by comparison, remains largely transactional. Therefore, analysts suggest the next phase rests on value addition, agribusiness, and manufacturing, alongside using Dubai as a financial platform rather than simply a destination. The foundation is firmly in place, and the opportunity for both partners is clear.
The post UAE–SADC Trade Corridor: Two Champions Rise appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

